“It is a kind of monument of Japan’s rapid bubble-economy expansion [of the 1980s], and it is also a pulsating hub of activity in modern Tokyo. It has both vitality and ‘weight’, and at the same time it possesses a peculiar emptiness that reflects the post-bubble economy. In my image, the people disappear and the scene takes on these intangible aspects.”
Photography and Japan [3]
“Some photographers take pictures of cities that show no humans and the fact that none appear is somehow meaningful. But I have no interest in this kind of expression—the meaning that a desolate city suggests. I have no interest in photos that imply something. The possibility of the photograph that doesn’t imply anything, cut off from any implication or meaning. The photograph that has nothing hidden behind and shows nothing but the things captured. The photograph that does not seek meaning; rather, is disconnected from meaning—I consider the photograph to be something cut off from the world. Reality and the photograph are parallel. These parallel lines do not meet.”
Beta Exercise: The Theory and Practice of Osamu Kanemura